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Senate Republicans now have enough support within their conference to pass Trump-backed voter ID legislation, but a major hurdle remains.

The Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act has secured the backing of 50 Senate Republicans, following a pressure campaign by the White House and a cohort of Senate conservatives over the past several weeks.

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, has led the charge in the upper chamber, ramping up his efforts last week as the bill moved through the House.

Lee told Fox News Digital that he was ‘ecstatic’ about the progress made in shoring up support for the legislation and hoped the Senate would move as quickly as possible to consider it. 

‘I would love to see us turn to it next week, perhaps the day after the State of the Union address,’ Lee said. ‘I think that would be good timing. But I think this needs to get done sooner rather than later.’

That multifaceted campaign — both on social media and behind closed doors in the Senate — proved successful, drawing support from Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and several others.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, became the 50th senator to back the bill. That gives Republicans the internal support they need to advance the legislation procedurally, but only if they turn to the standing, or talking, filibuster.

Before leaving Washington, D.C., for a weeklong break last week, Lee and other supporters, including Sens. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., and Rick Scott, R-Fla., pitched the voter ID proposal and potential pathways to pass it to colleagues.

‘We had some good senators stand up and say, ‘No, we got to fight for this,’’ Johnson told Fox News Digital. ‘I’m with them. We need to fight for this.’

Still, the effort faces heavy resistance from Senate Democrats, who are nearly unified in their opposition.

The only potential outlier is Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., who has pushed back against Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s, D-N.Y., characterization of the bill as ‘Jim Crow 2.0’ but has not said whether he would ultimately support the SAVE America Act.

Despite that possibility, Schumer and most of his caucus plan to block the legislation.

‘We will not let it pass in the Senate,’ Schumer told CNN’s Jake Tapper. ‘We are fighting it tooth and nail.’

Not every Senate Republican is onboard, either. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, has announced she will vote against the measure, while Sens. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Thom Tillis, R-N.C., have not signed on as co-sponsors.

One option to bypass Democratic opposition would be nuking the filibuster and its 60-vote threshold — a move some congressional Republicans argue has effectively become a ‘zombie filibuster,’ since legislation can be blocked simply by withholding votes rather than holding the floor.

Despite previous pressure from President Donald Trump to eliminate the filibuster, the move does not have the votes among Republicans to succeed — a point Thune underscored last week.

‘There aren’t anywhere close to the votes — not even close — to nuking the filibuster,’ Thune said.

That leaves a return to the standing, or talking, filibuster — the precursor to today’s procedural hurdle. Under that approach, Senate Democrats would be required to hold the floor and publicly debate their opposition, as senators did for decades before the modern filibuster became standard practice.

The idea appears to be gaining traction among some Republicans, though critics warn it could effectively paralyze the upper chamber for days, weeks or even months, depending on Democrats’ resolve.

Lee said that many senators he’s spoken with are open to the idea, and that those who were reluctant didn’t believe it wouldn’t work. 

‘I understand why people might have questions about a procedure that we’re not familiar with,’ Lee said. ‘It doesn’t mean we don’t have to do it, because we do.’

Meanwhile, Trump has suggested he could take matters into his own hands if Congress cannot pass the SAVE America Act.

In a Truth Social post last week, Trump called the legislation a ‘CAN’T MISS FOR RE-ELECTION IN THE MIDTERMS, AND BEYOND.’

‘This is an issue that must be fought, and must be fought, NOW! If we can’t get it through Congress, there are legal reasons why this SCAM is not permitted,’ Trump wrote. ‘I will be presenting them shortly, in the form of an Executive Order.’

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Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., is ready to put Senate Democrats to the test on voter ID legislation.

The Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act has earned the backing of 50 Senate Republicans, including Thune, which is enough to break through a key procedural hurdle.

Whether it can pass from the Senate to President Donald Trump’s desk is, for now, an unlikely scenario if lawmakers take the traditional path in the upper chamber. Still, Thune wants to put Democrats on the spot as midterm elections creep closer.

‘We will have a vote,’ Thune told Fox News Digital.

His comments came as he crisscrossed his home state of South Dakota, where he and Republicans in their respective states are out selling their legislative achievements as primary season fast approaches.

Thune viewed the opportunity of a floor vote as a way to have Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and his caucus explain to voters why they would block a legislative push to federally enshrine voter ID and proof of citizenship to register to vote.

‘We will make sure that everybody’s on the record, and if they want to be against ensuring that only American citizens vote in our elections, they can defend that when they have to go out and campaign against Republicans this fall,’ Thune said.

But the political makeup of the Senate will prove a tricky path to navigate if Republicans want to pass the bill.

Though the majority of the Senate GOP backs the bill, without at least a handful of Senate Democrats joining them, it is destined to fall victim to the 60-vote filibuster threshold.

And Schumer has time and again made clear that he and the majority of Senate Democrats view the legislation, which passed the House last week, as a tool of voter suppression that would unduly harm poorer Americans and minority groups.

So Senate Republicans are looking at their options.

One, which Thune already threw cold water on, is nuking the Senate filibuster. The other is turning to the talking, or standing, filibuster. It’s the physical precursor to the current filibuster that requires hours upon hours of debate over a bill.

Some fear that taking that path could paralyze the Senate floor. Thune acknowledged that concern, having previously made it himself, but noted another wrinkle.

‘A lot of people focus on unlimited debate, and yes, it is something that could drag on for weeks or literally, for that matter, months,’ Thune said. ‘But it’s also unlimited amendments, meaning that every amendment — there’s no rules — so every amendment will be 51 votes.’

He argued that there are several politically challenging amendments that could hit the floor that would put members in tough reelections in a hard spot and possibly cause them to pass, which ‘could also be very detrimental to the bill in the end.’

Thune didn’t shut down the idea of turning to the talking filibuster, especially if it ended in lawmakers being able to actually pass the SAVE America Act. But in the Senate, outcomes are rarely guaranteed on politically divisive legislation.

‘I think that, you know, this obviously is a mechanism of trying to pursue an outcome, but I don’t know that, in the end, it’ll get you the outcome you want,’ Thune said. ‘And there could be a lot of ancillary damage along the way.’

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We’re going about this Jerome Tang thing the wrong way. 

This isn’t about basketball, or the lack of a winning team, or hurt feelings or Tang embarrassing a university. 

This is about the underperforming football team at Kansas State. 

Because when football isn’t right, nothing else matters. When you’re staring at K-State paying Tang what is believed to be the largest buyout for a coach in college basketball history, the mind immediately moves to where that money could be better spent. 

Like, I don’t know, the football team.

When Chris Klieman decided after last season that his health couldn’t take the unruly state of college football, and that Kansas State wasn’t helping matters by how it approached player procurement for the front porch of the university’s sports programs, he retired and left no doubt why. 

“You guys are smart enough to realize that those who have the most money, have the best players,” Klieman said after K-State’s regular season final against Colorado. “And they’re spending $40-50 million. The ones like us that don’t, man, we’ve got to scratch and fight and claw.”

So K-State accepted the resignation of the best coach it could possibly ask for since Bill Snyder’s second retirement, and hired former Wildcats great Collin Klein.

I don’t think I’m breaking news by saying K-State had to have made significant financial promises to Klein to get him to take the job. You’re not winning at a high level in the Big 12 if you’re not spending, and Klein could’ve waited at Texas A&M until the right job opened at an SEC school.

We now circle back to Tang, who led K-State to the NCAA tournament after his first season in 2023, and then signed a lucrative seven-year extension. The program has struggled since, and K-State has every right to terminate the contract of a struggling coach.

Then pay him what he is owed on the remainder of his deal: $18.7 million.

Now here’s where it gets fuzzy, and quite frankly, more than disturbing. 

After an ugly home loss to Cincinnati, Tang ripped into his players, saying they “don’t deserve to wear this uniform” and “they don’t love this place, so they don’t deserve to be here.”

Then he said he’d wear a paper bag on his head, too, if he were a K-State fan. 

If John Calipari said this at Arkansas, if Rick Pitino said this at St. Johns, they’d be celebrated for not pandering to today’s lavished student-athletes. 

Hell, Mick Cronin does it nearly every game at UCLA — win or lose. 

But now — now — K-State is deep in its feelings. Now we’re supposed to believe the hardscrabble, no guts, no glory athletics program is offended by a basketball coach spitting truth to a bunch of players paid to play a game?

Mommy, the mean man said I won’t be around much longer because I’m not playing defense and giving effort!

I’m gonna puke.  

Make no mistake, K-State took the fiscally prudent road out. Even with all the inherent potholes of trying to fire for cause.

K-State officials say Tang ripping his team embarrassed the university, and is just cause for dismissal. Uh, folks, your basketball team embarrassed the university. 

And this decision is a close second.

By firing for cause, K-State is trying to avoid losing millions in buyout money, and that $18-and-change million owed to Tang sure would look good supporting the new coach of a football program that won six games in 2025. 

The football program that has again fallen behind in the Big 12, this time after an elite coach could take it no more. The state of college football is bad enough, it’s worse when the financial support isn’t there. 

So you better believe K-State is going down this road, reputation be damned. They’ll take it to court and hope Tang wants to coach again, and just wants a resolution to the whole mess. 

Pay him half of what they owe him (or less), and use the rest to support the one program that fuels all in Manhattan. It’s not like this hasn’t happened before.

Tennessee self-reported NCAA violations to get out of paying Jeremy Pruitt’s buyout, paying an $8 million fine to the NCAA instead. Michigan State did the same to Mel Tucker when he was accused of sexual harassment — a case from the alleged victim that was later thrown out in court.

This is how universities clean up their contractual messes: by starting fires in the other corner as diversionary tactics.

I’m guessing Snyder, the man who orchestrated the greatest turnaround in college football history at woebegone K-State, told players on some of those early teams in Manhattan that they didn’t deserve to wear the purple. Told many that they weren’t coming back the following season. 

After a one-point loss to TCU in 2018 that included a missed extra point and a critical fumble by wide receiver Isaiah Zuber, Snyder said, ‘It wasn’t special teams as much as it was an individual.’

And that was tame compared to how he held players accountable.

But Snyder is a hero in the heartland. Has a statute in front of the stadium that bears his name. 

Hell, he probably puked, too, when he heard the news.

Until he learned it could help the football program. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A deadly shooting at a high school hockey game in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, left two people deceased and at least three individuals wounded following a family dispute on Feb. 16, according to the Pawtucket Police Department.

The New England Patriots were among the many in the sports world to react to the shooting. The six-time Super Bowl-winning franchise issued a statement regarding the incident on social media.

‘The New England Patriots organization is heartbroken by the tragic shooting that occurred today in Pawtucket, Rhode Island,’ their statement on X, formerly Twitter, said. ‘Our hearts are with the students, coaches, fans and all those affected by this act of violence.’

Pawtucket is a city within Providence County. The shooting occurred at Dennis M. Lynch Arena, which is nearly five miles from Providence.

The site is about a 20-mile drive to Gillette Stadium, the football home of the Patriots.

See reactions from the sports world

Here’s how other local sports teams reacted to the Pawtucket shooting on Feb. 16.

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House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn., is accusing Democrats of being hypocritical in their opposition to Republicans’ latest election integrity bill.

The No. 3 House Republican ripped the rival party after nearly all of them voted against the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE America) Act last week, specifically over its provision mandating federally accepted photo identification at the polls. It’s also sometimes referred to as the ‘SAVE Act.’

‘These guys are doing the same old broken record about voter suppression,’ Emmer told Fox News Digital. ‘Why aren’t they screaming about photo IDs at the airport? Why aren’t they screaming about photo IDs when you check out a book at the library?’

Emmer pointed out that a photo ID was required for attendees to watch former Vice President Kamala Harris accept the Democratic Party’s nomination for the White House in Chicago last year.

‘By the way, if they think it’s voter suppression, why do they require photo IDs at the Democrat National Convention to get in?’ Emmer said.

‘I mean, I think Americans are so much smarter than these people can understand, can let themselves understand,’ he said.

The SAVE America Act passed the House on Wednesday with support from all Republicans — an increasingly rare sight in the chamber — and just one Democrat, Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas.

A previous iteration of the bill, just called the SAVE Act, passed the House in April of last year with support from four House Democrats.

Whereas the SAVE Act would have created a new federal proof-of-citizenship mandate in the voter registration process and imposed requirements for states to keep their rolls clear of ineligible voters, the updated bill would also require photo ID to vote in any federal election.

That photo ID would also have to denote proof-of-citizenship, according to the legislative text.

Democratic leaders in the House and Senate have both panned the bill, with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries calling it ‘voter suppression’ and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., dismissing it as ‘a modern-day Jim Crow.’

Jeffries also specifically took issue with a provision that would enable the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to initiate removal proceedings if an illegal immigrant was found on a state’s voter rolls, arguing DHS would weaponize the information.

But voter ID, at least, has proven to be a popular standard in U.S. elections across multiple public polls.

A Pew Research Center poll released in August 2025 showed a whopping 83% of people supported government-issued photo ID requirements for showing up to vote, compared to just 16% of people who disapproved of it.

A Gallup poll from October 2024 showed 84% of people supported photo ID for voting in federal elections.

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CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Elana Meyers Taylor and Kaillie Armbruster Humphries are Olympic medalists once again.

The queens of bobsled finished first and third in the women’s monobob event Monday, Feb. 16 at the Cortina Sliding Center.

It was the first gold medal in Meyers Taylor’s legendary career, and her sixth overall, tying Bonnie Blair for most medals by an American woman in Winter Olympics history. Meyers Taylor also became just the second Black woman to win an individual gold medal in a Winter Olympics. She won her first Olympic medal (a bronze) back in 2010 in Vancouver.

‘I still can’t believe it. I still can’t even put into words what this means and having the gold medal,’ Meyers Taylor said, beaming. ‘It’s still surreal, but it still is everything and it still is nothing because at the end of the day, in six days I’ve got school pickups and drop-offs in the middle of Texas.’

Armbruster Humphries has now collected five medals from five Olympics, including the gold medal in monobob for Team USA at the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing. She also won gold medals in two-woman bobsled in Vancouver and the 2014 Sochi Games.

‘They’re all different. This one specifically is tied to the mom journey over this last year and a half,’ said Armbruster Humphries, whose son Aulden was born in June 2024. ‘There was no guarantee. And so I really came into this race just trying to be the best version that I could be for myself and for my son.’

Meyers Taylor and Armbruster Humphries both set track records in the third run to narrow the gap with Germany’s Laura Nolte of Germany, who led after each of the first three runs. Meyers Taylor had a great final run, putting pressure on Nolte to be clean if she wanted to win gold.

But Nolte made a significant mistake at the start and never recovered. Meyers Taylor finished with a total time of 3:57.93 across four runs, edging Nolte (3:57.97) by 0.04 seconds. Armbruster Humphries (3:58.05) finished 0.12 back.

Fellow Team USA bobsledder Kaysha Love finished seventh.

It’s the second event of the 2026 Winter Olympics in which Team USA put multiple people on the podium. Jaelin Kauf and Liz Lemley won silver and bronze, respectively, in women’s dual moguls Saturday, Feb. 14.

In six races at five Olympics, Meyers Taylor has never finished outside the top three, making her the most decorated woman in bobsled history. She won a silver medal in the inaugural Olympic women’s monobob event in Beijing four years ago.

Her latest triumph comes at age 41, just over three years after giving birth to her second son Noah in 2022. Both boys, including her eldest Nico (born in 2020), watched Meyers Taylor race from accessible seats at the Cortina Sliding Center.

‘My boys are my motivation for this. My boys are the reason I kept going,’ Meyers Taylor said. ‘At the end of the day, it means nothing because I’m still just mom to them. I got more bling to hang around my neck, but at the end of the day, they just want to be cuddled and held and that’s what’s going to happen.’

Armbruster Humphries, 40, debuted at the 2010 Olympics, competing for Canada in Vancouver, Sochi (2014) and PyeongChang (2018) before switching to Team USA in 2019. She was granted U.S. Citizenship in 2021, five years after moving to the United States with her husband Travis Armbruster in 2016.

Humphries underwent IVF treatment to become a mother after being diagnosed with stage IV endometriosis in 2021.

‘Similar to how my birth went, and just the IVF journey in general, there was no guarantee, and there’s no guarantee in medals,’ Armbruster Humphries said. ‘So I’m very proud to be able to have him and then be here. It’s kind of like my have my cake and eat it, too, moment.’

Meyers Taylor and Armbruster Humphries return to the track Tuesday, Feb. 17 for the first  official two-woman training runs. Meyers Taylor will be accompanied by push athlete Jadin O’Brien, while Armbruster Humphries is paired with Jasmine Jones. Both O’Brien and Jones are Olympic rookies.

The first two of four heats are Friday, Feb. 20, while the third and final medal heat are Saturday, Feb. 21. All four runs will be added together, and the lowest total time will win.

Reach USA TODAY Network sports reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com, and follow her on X @petitus25.

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A little more than a week after her gruesome crash, Lindsey Vonn says she is ‘slowly coming back to life.’

She appears to be in good spirits, making faces, laughing and smiling.

‘Thankful for friends, family, my team and all the medical staff that are getting me back to myself…. I’m slowly coming back to life, back to basics and the simple things in life that mean the most. Smile. Laugh. Love,’ Vonn wrote, adding praying hands and a heart emoji.

In additional images on her Instagram story, Vonn is seen with her siblings and with actress Mariska Hargitay. Vonn is a huge Law and Order: SVU fan, and was at the premier of Hargitay’s documentary about her mother, ‘My Mom Jayne’ last year. Hargitay has been in Milano Cortina for the Olympics, posting photos of herself taking in events

Vonn suffered a complex tibial fracture in the crash. She’s had four surgeries while in the hospital in Italy, and has said she will have to have at least one more when she returns to the United States.

Opinion: Lindsey Vonn’s crash was cruel. Her bravery epitomizes Olympic spirit

What happened to Lindsey Vonn?

Vonn hooked the fourth gate with her right arm, which sent her spinning and hurtling into the hard, packed snow. She tumbled end over end several times before coming to a stop.

‘Things just happen so quick in this sport,’ U.S. teammate Bella Wright said after the race. ‘It looked like Lindsey had incredible speed out of that turn, and she hooked her arm and it’s just over just like that.’

The three-time Olympic medalist remained prone in the snow, and she could be heard wailing in pain. The gasps and groans from fans faded into shocked silence as medics worked on her. Vonn remained on the course for approximately 13 minutes before being loaded into a helicopter.

What is Lindsey Vonn’s injury?

In an Instagram post on Feb. 9, Vonn shared the devastating news that she suffered a complex tibia fracture that will require multiple surgeries. The 41-year-old updated fans on Feb. 11 after a third surgery in Italy and included some gruseome photos of her progress . On Feb. 14, Vonn posted after her fourth surgery that she still has more procedures ahead of her, but was finally able to return to the United States.

‘Once I’m back I will give you more updates and info about my injury,’ Vonn wrote.

A tibia fracture is a break in the shin bone that is an emergency needing immediate treatment. ‘Your tibias are some of the strongest bones in your body. It usually takes a lot of force to break one,’ according to the Cleveland Clinic. ‘You probably won’t be able to stand, walk or put weight on your leg if you have a broken shin bone.’

A complex fracture involves multiple breaks in a bone and damaged soft tissue, according Yale Medicine. Symptoms include extreme pain, numbness and, sometimes, a bone that protrudes through the skin. Treatment involves stabilization and surgery.

Lindsey Vonn crash video

NBC broadcasts the Olympics and posted video of Vonn’s crash .

USA TODAY Sports’ Samantha Cardona-Norberg breaks down Linsdey Vonn’s crash just after it happened.

Fans went silent as soon as Vonn crash, reacting with shock, grief and later support as the helicopter lifted her into the sky. USA TODAY Sports talked to some fans after the crash .

Is Lindsey Vonn OK?

Vonn was in obvious pain after the crash, but she was moving her arms, head and neck.

About 18 minutes after the crash, the helicopter slowly began flying toward Cortina. ‘Let’s let Lindsey Vonn hear us!’ the American announcer said as the chopper flew away with her, and the crowd cheered and applauded.

Vonn’s sister Karin Kildow was at the course today for the downhill and spoke to NBC reporters during their live broadcast:

‘I mean that definitely was the last thing we wanted to see and it happened quick and when that happens, you’re just immediately hoping she’s okay. And it was scary because when you start to see the stretchers being put out, it’s not a good sign,’ Kildow said. ‘But she really … She just dared greatly and she put it all out there. So it’s really hard to see, but we just really hope she’s okay.

‘She does have all of her surgeons and her PT staff here and her doctors, so I’m sure they’ll give us a report and we’ll meet her at whatever hospital she’s at.’

Lindsey Vonn torn ACL

It was second time in as many weeks Vonn left a mountaintop on a chopper. She fully ruptured her left ACL, sustaining meniscus damage and bone bruising , in a downhill crash on Jan. 30, in the final World Cup event prior to the start of the Olympics.

Vonn is also skiing with a partial replacement of her right knee. She had dominated the sport before the crash, making the podium in all five downhill races this season and winning two of them.

Despite the latest injury, Vonn was determined to race at her fifth and final Olympics. She said her knee felt stable and strong, and she had spent the last week doing intense rehab , pool workouts, weight lifting and plyometrics. She skied both training runs, posting the third-fastest time in the second run before it was canceled because of fog and snow.

Lindsey Vonn torn ACL

Vonn is 41 and was skiing in her fifth Winter Olympics (2002, 2006, 2010, 2018, 2026). She has won three Olympic medals (1 gold, 2 bronze).

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Everyone loves to see a power couple profess their love for one another, whether publicly or privately, especially in sports.

Myles Garrett and Chloe Kim put their love on display at the 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Milano Cortina, Italy. Sometimes, simply showing up to support a significant other can be the greatest gesture, as Garrett did after winning the 2026 NFL Defensive Player of the Year Award.

The Browns star flew to Italy to support Kim, a professional snowboarder and two-time Olympic gold medalist, competing at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina.

The 2026 Winter Games take place in the middle of Valentine’s Day weekend, but that didn’t stop the two from showcasing their affection for each other.

Kim received a new, custom-pink Ford Bronco from her boyfriend, featuring her initials, CK, embroidered on the seats.

‘I’m obsessed,’ Kim posted to her Instagram story.

Garrett showed his support for Kim and rocked a T-shirt that she confirmed she bought for him, which read ‘I [love] my super hot beautiful girlfriend so please stay away from me.’

‘So proud of you! I’m thankful that I get to be by your side watching the extraordinary things you do,’ Garrett said on a social media post. ‘You fought through so much to even get to this point and you earned everything and more. The [goat emoji], my love and my Valentine. Happy Valentine’s Day babe.’

The two have been public with their relationship since May 2025.

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Arizona’s reign as the No. 1 team in the USA TODAY Sports men’s basketball coaches poll is over for now. After five weeks at the top, the Wildcats took their first two losses of the season, losing their hold on the Big 12 lead as well.

Michigan reclaims the No. 1 ranking, the unanimous choice after the Wolverines extended their current winning streak to 10. Houston, now alone atop the Big 12, climbs to No. 2. Duke vaults to third as Arizona falls to No. 4. Connecticut continues to round out the top five.

It was a mixed week for Iowa State, which drops two positions to No. 6 but picked up a convincing bounce-back win against red-hot Kansas. Purdue leaps back into the top 10 at No. 7, a gain of five positions. Gonzaga, Nebraska and Illinois round out the top 10.

Kansas slips to No. 12 behind Florida, whose late charge continues with another three-spot gain. Texas Tech also moves up three places to No. 13 after beating Arizona on the road.

Virginia checks in a slot higher at No. 14, but a couple other ranked ACC squads weren’t as fortunate as North Carolina tumbles seven places to No. 20 and Clemson takes a six-position fall to No. 24.

Wisconsin, nudges into the poll at No. 25, replacing fellow Big Ten member Iowa.

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Damian Lillard might have just sparked anticipation for possibly the greatest NBA 3-Point Contest of all-time.

After Lillard won his third State Farm NBA 3-Point Contest in a stunning, edge-of-the-seat fashion during the 2026 NBA All-Star Weekend, he caught the attention of another great NBA shooter, arguably the greatest of all-time, who seemingly wants in on next year’s competition.

Stephen Curry, the NBA’s all-time leader in three-point shots made, confirmed in an Instagram direct message to Lillard that he would compete in the 2027 NBA All-Star Weekend’s 3-Point Contest in Phoenix, Arizona.

Lillard reached out to Curry first to assemble the troops.

He lobbied for himself, Curry, Klay Thompson and Devin Booker to be frontrunners in next year’s competition, adding they would need to find four more participants.

‘Next year … me, you, Klay, Book, and 4 more real shooters,’ Lillard said.

Curry responded with excitement and interest in the ultimate competition between the league’s best shooters.

‘Yessir I’m in. Know Klay will do it if I ask and Book will be at home. Perfect setup,’ Curry wrote, according to Lillard’s Instagram story.

Lillard posted the interaction to his social channel, seemingly confirming the arrangement.

‘It’s lit,’ Lillard captioned his Instagram story.

Previous 3-Point contest winners

Lillard defeated Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker in the championship round of the 2026 State Farm NBA 3-Point Contest on Feb. 14. He became the third player ever to win the contest three times, joining Larry Bird and Craig Hodges.

Lillard scored 29 in the final round. Booker had the chance to win with 27 points and three shots remaining on his money ball rack, but he missed the final shots of his last rack, where each shot would have counted as two points instead of one.

The other competitors during the 2026 State Farm 3-Point Contest were Charlotte Hornets forward Kon Knueppel, Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell, Denver Nuggets guard Jamal Murray, Miami Heat guard Norman Powell, Milwaukee Bucks forward Bobby Portis Jr. and Philadelphia 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey.

Booker was crowned the 2018 NBA All-Star Three-Point Contest winner. Curry previously won the competition in 2015 and 2021. Thompson won the NBA Three-Point Contest in 2016 in Toronto, defeating then-teammate Curry with a final round score of 27.

Here’s a list of previous NBA 3-Point Contest winners dating back to the first event in 1986:

  • Damian Lillard, 2026
  • Tyler Herro, 2025
  • Damian Lillard, 2024
  • Damian Lillard,2023
  • Karl-Anthony Towns, 2022
  • Stephen Curry, 2021
  • Buddy Hield, 2020
  • Joe Harris,2019
  • Devin Booker, 2018
  • Eric Gordon, 2017
  • Klay Thompson, 2016
  • Stephen Curry, 2015
  • Marco Belinelli, 2014
  • Kyrie Irving, 2013
  • Kevin Love,2012
  • James Jones, 2011
  • Paul Pierce, 2010
  • Daequan Cook, 2009
  • Jason Kapono, 2008
  • Jason Kapono, 2007
  • Dirk Nowitzki, 2006
  • Quentin Richardson, 2005
  • Voshon Leonard, 2004
  • Peja Stojakovic, 2003
  • Peja Stojakovic, 2002
  • Ray Allen, 2001
  • Jeff Hornacek, 2000
  • Jeff Hornacek, 1998
  • Steve Kerr, 1997
  • Tim Legler, 1996
  • Glen Rice, 1995
  • Mark Price,1994
  • Mark Price, 1993
  • Craig Hodges,1992
  • Craig Hodges, 1991
  • Craig Hodges, 1990
  • Dale Ellis, 1989
  • Larry Bird, 1988
  • Larry Bird,1987
  • Larry Bird, 1986
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